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View Full Version : History of the Khalwatiyya Tariqa al Shareef


Wadood
12-05-2004, 11:59 PM
:bism1:





TARIQA KHALWATIYA



One of the widespread and ramified orders of Sufis is that of the

Khalwatiya (or Helvetiye). The order takes its name from the Arabic

word `khalwa' a method of withdrawal or isolation from the

world for mystical purposes. The founder of the order is Shaykh Sidi

Abu Abdullah Siraj al-Din Umar al-Ahji or Umar al-Khalwati who died

about 800/1397 in Tabriz.



The Tariqa was propelled very far after him by his disciple Sidi

Yahya Shirvani (d.1463), from Shamakhi in the Caucasus. About 1460,

Yahya Shirvani moved from Shamakhi to Baku to attract around him ten

thousand people. Shaykh Yahya had a number of disciples and men of

charisma like Pir Ilyas of Amasya and Zakariya al-Khalwati who

inherited the secret of the Shaykh and moved the headquarters of

Tariqa to Amasya in north central Anatolia after their Shaykh's

death in 868/1463.



With the transfer of the Khalwati nucleus to Amasya, the inner

circle of the order gave it a decisive new direction. The thirty-

year reign of sultan Bayazid (1481-1511), formerly the governor of

Amasya, was the real heyday of the Khalwati order in Ottoman Turkey.

The sultan himself attended the meetings of the Khalwati order and

visited regularly Shaykh Tariqa Khalwatiya Sidi Ahmad al-Erzinjani,

Muhammad Jamal al-Din al-Asara'i better known as Chelebi Khalifa,

who became the master of Khalwati order after his Shaykh Sidi

`Umar Aydini Habib Qaramani.



At royal request the headquarters of the Tariqa were moved from

Amasya to Istanbul, and when the Shaykh and his disciples reached

the capital, they were presented with a former Byzantine church to

remodel into a Zawiya. Sultan Bayazid turned over his son Ahmed to

Shaykh Chelebi to be educated. About 1500, Chelebi Khalifa, who had

served as the head of the order in its most crucial move and through

an important period of establishment in the capital, died. The

succession passed to Chelebi's son-in-law, Sidi Sunbul Sinan.



During the reigns of Sulayman the Magnificent (1520-1566) and Selim

II (1566-1574) the Khalwatiya under the leadership of Shaykh Sidi

Muslih al-Din Merkez Efendi expanded both in the capital and in the

provinces. The Tariqa had built a number of zawaya in Istanbul and

many more elsewhere. The Tariqa expanded quickly to many Ottoman

provinces.